Map Thread XIX

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It has it's ups and downs, but when I was evaluating both, I found ArcGIS just too infuriatingly un-intuitive to use that there was no way I was going to pay touse it. Plus, QGIS is multi-platform and I am a Linux user at home and OS X at work.

Personally, I find it extremely useful to not only get my maps cartographically accurate before exporting to SVG for artistic work in Inkscape, but also to speed up things like tracing other layers, editing/splitting shapes for countries/provinces/etc…, plus for reusing data from map to map, like coastlines, lakes and rivers, and so on. One of my favourite plugins is a time manager that auto-filters layers based on date/time attributes which has enabled me to do timeline maps fairly easily.

Hah, its funny. I feel the exact same way in reverse. Pro's workflows, interface and overall appearance just work so much more cleanly for me, while with QGIS I felt like I had to be a bit of a code-monkey at times to do the same tasks. QGIS also has much more limited options for advanced terrain raster creation. If your working on some proper shaded relief work I would recommend ESRI over QGIS unless you can find some specialist secondary software.

I can definitely say QGIS than ArcPro at setting up frames for gifs. It also has a lot of great layer blending options that Pro just...doesn't have. I'm lucky to get access to ESRI products through my work, but its great that you can achieve the same level of visual quality in both software. Heres a map showcase for QGIS: https://www.flickr.com/groups/qgis/pool/
 
Personally, I find it extremely useful to not only get my maps cartographically accurate before exporting to SVG for artistic work in Inkscape, but also to speed up things like tracing other layers, editing/splitting shapes for countries/provinces/etc…, plus for reusing data from map to map, like coastlines, lakes and rivers, and so on. One of my favourite plugins is a time manager that auto-filters layers based on date/time attributes which has enabled me to do timeline maps fairly easily.
Hah, its funny. I feel the exact same way in reverse. Pro's workflows, interface and overall appearance just work so much more cleanly for me, while with QGIS I felt like I had to be a bit of a code-monkey at times to do the same tasks. QGIS also has much more limited options for advanced terrain raster creation. If your working on some proper shaded relief work I would recommend ESRI over QGIS unless you can find some specialist secondary software.
Meanwhile, I use Paint.
 
The partition of Mexico from 1916 to 1943. https://www.deviantart.com/ynot1989/art/The-Atlantean-Century-1947-822263705

pOtI2Cn.png
 

Bytor

Monthly Donor
Meanwhile, I use Paint.

Do what work for you, and don't let anybody tell you you're wrong.

My requirements are not your requirements. I'm coming from a nearly three decade long IT career so it's nothing for me to set up a replicated PostgreSQL database to save my map data and then use that to supply an apache+tomcat to put my maps online. But it's OK if you don't need that. Just post here to makes us happy seeing your maps. :)
 
I guess it depends on how strong your xenochiropteran allergy is. ;-)

I imagine it would take a remarkably powerful ASB to get Germany to squeeze onto the Bismark. This is exceeding "fill the north Atlantic with a continent of cheese" difficulty levels.

EDIT: it's not that it isn't a very nice-looking map. But if any map deserves to go to the ASB map thread, it's this one.


Great work! Does Nueva Galicia belong to the USA?
 
View attachment 505356
All the members of the United Nations by the year 2XXX. In this world, the UN is a heavily militarized organization that was founded as an anti-colonial alliance. It's leading members are China, India, and Ethiopia. While it started it out small, it gained a large increase following the Empress Tatiana Wars and gradually increased further over the following decades as the German Colonial Empire collapsed. It's power over it's member nations is immense and ,if necessary, is able to override the authority of it's member nations, when it comes to manners of collective peace,security, and human rights. On the flip side, joining the UN has immense economic benefits as whole nations have been lifted out of poverty by joining the UN as it grants large sums of money to invest in infrastructure, education, healthcare, etc. Most nations within the UN are republics, with the exception of Ethiopia,North America and Thailand who are essentially crowned republics. It's headquarters are in the city of New Ayodhya, which is also the name of the artificial island that the UN HQ was built on.

(My basic inspirations for this UN were Evangelion and Appleseed.)

This can also serve as a map for the ancestral populations of the Union of Jovian Moon Republics
Interesting. It looks like the Ottoman Empire is around, but with only Greece and Turkey? I wonder how that would work out. And Ireland is united? What is the country in Eastern Europe called? And lastly, how did the North American country form, and why is it part of an anti- imperialist UN?
 
All done. Whew! This has been my biggest project in a while. Please ask away if you are curious. I'll do my best to answer any questions.

Very nice indeed! I'd think that Japan and Russia would ally: Japan has high tech and manufacturing capacities Russia needs, Russia has raw materials and an immediately available nuclear deterrent, and both don't want to end up as China's bum-boy.

Israel would expand to the Euphrates, of course. :biggrin:

There are currently some 5 million Russians in Central Asia: if the majority left, they could probably build a fair-sized state.

I suspect Muslims on Hindu-Earth are having a hard time of it.

I find myself imagining 80-year old Pieds Noir returning to Algeria and declaring they're going to rebuild their house right where it was. :biggrin:
 

Deleted member 94708

MuricanTauri beat me to it. And while he's largely on-point, just to add: while the Chinese Empire prior to the Terror was strong enough to have avoided a severe Century of Humiliation, there were still tensions beneath the surface, mainly from secessionist groups, ambitious nobles and provincial governors, and a divided government. The assassination of the Emperor, combined with the Provisional Regency's hasty efforts to re-establish order pretty much plunged the country into unrest and civil war.

Granted, China's fall to Collectivism didn't happen overnight, and a period of warlordism persisted into the 1940s-50s. But all things considered, the Free Chinese being able to hold onto Hainan, Taiwan and parts of both Fujian and Guangdong is in itself something of a "success."

I don’t think the examples he cites are much use at all; nomadic cavalry vs early industrial warfare.

A somewhat modern and industrial China is an extremely tough nut for what seems like a Russian-centric polity to crack.

Your timeline at the end of the day but nothing unites China like a foreign opponent, at least in the modern era.
 
Very nice indeed! I'd think that Japan and Russia would ally: Japan has high tech and manufacturing capacities Russia needs, Russia has raw materials and an immediately available nuclear deterrent, and both don't want to end up as China's bum-boy.

Israel would expand to the Euphrates, of course. :biggrin:

There are currently some 5 million Russians in Central Asia: if the majority left, they could probably build a fair-sized state.

I suspect Muslims on Hindu-Earth are having a hard time of it.

I find myself imagining 80-year old Pieds Noir returning to Algeria and declaring they're going to rebuild their house right where it was. :biggrin:
1. Thank you
2. I initially thought of just about everyone allying to Russia after deciding China was the greater threat, but with their shrinking population I thought they would give in to their paranoia and turn to isolationism. Also I think that Japan is capable of building a nuclear bomb very quickly, which I expect them to do in this scenario. Your point is certainly valid and another possible outcome though. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_latency
3. All in good time, Bruce. The mouth of the Nile was thought to be a higher priority.
4. I imagine most of them are settled permanently, so probably less than 1 million leave in the first 10 years. Maybe as many as half within the 50 years leading up to my map.
5. It could be better, there is discrimination but they are constitutionally protected in a democratic state. They have it better than most Christians on Al'ard, the Kurds, or just about anyone in the Gulf of Guinea region on Earth Prime.
6. There were many Pieds Noir returning to French-once-more Algeria, and the government indeed allowed those with historical ties first dibs on land claims. Though I don't know about the same spot. Its virgin land so none of the artificial landmarks exist, and the initial settlement effort was entirely costal so those from Constantine were out of luck.
 
Hyperborea - The Last Nazi Stronghold!
Gorgeous map, but something tells me that the Canadians would be upset at their watch post settlement being named Manifest Destiny. And that something is “a couple of Canadians here who are upset at the idea of accession to the Union.”
 

Deleted member 108228

Brothers of Socialism Tour Guide website, circa 2014

Welcome to the People’s Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, the first country to revolutionize the doctrine of socialism by combining it with the religion of over a billion adherents! From the intellect of our First President, Nur Muhammad Taraki, we have been able to revolutionize the way on which the eternal struggle of class consciousness, the ever-known problem of contradiction, were remedied with the introduction of his new, ever-knowledgeable doctrine. After he passed away, it was decided that the socialism practiced in this country would be termed Tarakism, in honor of his contributions to the country.


Afghan Religion

In Afghanistan, the main religion is Islam, with 99 percent of the population practicing it. 70 percent of Muslims are Sunni and 25 percent are Shia, and the rest are other religions, such as Sikh. The majority of Sunnis are of the Hanafi sect, while the majority of Shias are from the Hazara tribe and they live mainly in central Afghanistan, in provinces such as Bamyan, Oruzgan, Ghowr and Ghazni. Throughout Afghanistan’s history, Hazaras proved to be the most peaceful tribe in Afghanistan, even though constantly persecuted.


Travel to Afghanistan

The easiest way to travel to Afghanistan is by international air flight. The Soviet Union, the People’s Republic of China, the European Pact for Socialism, Mongolia, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, North Korea, Mozambique, Angola, Ethiopia, Somalia, Togo, Congo-Brazzaville, Guinea-Bissau, and Nicaragua all carry flights to Afghanistan.


Applying for an Afghan Visa

Kabul airport issues visas on arrival but ONLY to those who are officially invited by members of the PDP, or officials of other countries, but not tourists. To receive an Afghan tourist visa you first need to fill out the form that can be found on the Afghan foreign ministry and Afghan embassies websites.

Tourist visas last a month but can be extended up to three months in Afghanistan at the Interior Ministry office in Kabul or at police headquarters at the main cities of other provinces.


Afghan Tour Details

To start off, you’ll be heading to the capital of Kabul for the annual Saur Festival commemorating the Saur Revolution, the revolution that brought Afghanistan into the modern age. The Festival will have all sorts of spectacles, ranging from military parades by the People’s Afghan Army, the Triumph Games in the Rahimi Stadium, to even the traditional markets in Pashtunistan Street. After the Saur Festival, which will last for 10 days, you’ll spend the next two weeks touring the Afghan countryside, meeting the people that form the backbone of the People’s Democratic Republic.

Following the countryside tour you’ll spend a week in Kandahar, where you will learn about the history of the Saur Revolution of 1978 and the Great Struggle. To give a brief overview, after the Saur Revolution, the people viewed the PDP’s higher officials as nothing more than enemies of the people, and launched mass riots and demonstrations against them. Taraki, in his intellect, ordered reconciliation with these rabble-rousers. Yet some, including Taraki’s right-hand man, ordered a violent crackdown. This would not stand, and Taraki conducted a rectification of the PDP. Afterwards, taking inspiration from Islamic jurisprudence and translated Leninist texts, Taraki began to work with other PDP members to create what would become Tarakism, the first ever coherent blend of Islam and socialism.

After the Kandahar tour there will be an inspection of several agricultural, technical, and industrial facilities in the country, primarily in the North. These men and women are the ones providing basic amenities to the People’s Democratic Republic. Starting in Mazar-e-Sharif, the tour will take a look into the industrial factories, examining their craft, and understanding the need for ideological consistency and unity. After that, there will be a preview of several agricultural cooperatives in the region. There, you will be shown the strong, collective nature of revolutionary work, made to foster a sense of community, brotherhood, and unity between all works of life.

The last leg of the tour is, with the accompaniment of a guide, a travel throughout the country, exploring the vast beauty of the People’s Democratic Republic. For example, there are the Bamyan Buddhas. Located in Bamyan, these colossal structures built in the 6th Century are a feature of the cultural history of the Afghan people. Before this country was an Islamic nation, all kinds of religions made their mark, from Hinduism, Buddhism, and even Christianity. These ancient structures are a symbol of the Afghan people, as they remind us of our past, our present, and our future- a future of unity guided by Tarakism, under which Afghanistan shall truly prosper!

Once again we’d like to thank you for choosing your destination. You won’t regret it.

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Bytor

Monthly Donor
That's the thing, even when I group the map, it still says the region is not enclosed!

That means you have an open area through which paint with spill and fill the entire drawing area to Infinity. The bucket tool's sensitivity and accuracy depends on how far in or out you are zoomed, as it is not a perfectly exact fill, and if the edges of what you want to paint are too far off screen it won't paint. C.f. https://bugs.launchpad.net/inkscape/+bug/1506715
 
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